Most politicians are millionaires, given that having a million dollars in assets no longer makes you wealthy (this I know from personal experience). For many millionaires, it is just a matter of having one house, some savings, and an IRA. It's not 1952, when a millionaire was generally someone who could buy a yacht and a second mansion.
Anyway, being affluent is not a substantial argument for or against a politician's position on worker rights and advancement. If someone has an actual point about their policy ideas, then there would be an actual discussion. Otherwise, zzzzzzzzz
Having a million dollars in assets makes you wealthy.
"The median net worth of the average U.S. household is $97,300." Under 35, it's about $73.5 k.
That you have an IRA and a house sufficient to put your wealth in that category is great - but while it is not J. Paul Getty land, you are so far above the median as to make a claim that you are not wealthy absurd.
I'll grant you that "a household in the U.S. has an average net worth of $692,100, according to the most recent data from the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances," but that's the arithmetic mean, Barton, which is more than a tad skewed by the folks in the top 1%.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/whats-your-net-worth-and-how-do-you-compare-to-others-2018-09-24
Figures are from 2016
Josh, I had a middle class income, and still do. Assets, for people over 60, compute a little higher because homes are paid off, and IRA has accumulated more, and they are less likely to have debt. The fact that I squeak near to one mill is mostly due to flukes of owning property in a city where house values doubled in the past decade, inheriting a few antiques that turned out to be worth something, and some inheritance money that greatly helped with kids college meaning more years we could save. Without those bits of luck, and our good health, we'd be below that household average. What all this does is make us further aware of where middle class folk find themselves when they don't have so much good luck. It's why I gave 6K to someone who needed it for a medical issue... pretty much every penny that came my way through luck or someone's generosity (I didn't earn it, IOW) is going to be donated to people or groups that will benefit from passing that along. A roofer who took my down payment of 5K died, leaving a wife and four small children and a bankrupt business. I decided, though we didn't get a roof, that there was no way to get a refund without doing harm to the surviving family, so I let it go. If I could sell the antiques and give the proceeds to Habitat or Nature Conservancy or a dozen other groups I could list, I would do it tomorrow. (spouse would not go for that) If I could downsize to a smaller house, and donate the difference, ditto.
I'm basically a Buddhist. Stuff just doesn't matter. It's ridiculous that I have the stuff I do when people more hardworking than I ever was are struggling. Insane, really.
Accusing you of being wealthy in America (let alone the world) is not accusing you of being a bad person (or your wife, for that matter), Barton. It's just numerical.
I don't have a problem with Bernie's wealth, as I already said, just his duplicity. (His defensiveness grates, too.)
Our ages are not hugely different, as I recollect. I was a millionaire about 30 years ago, briefly. It allowed me a ton of lattitude for things of the sorts you describe - $50k per year of unearned income will do that. But I was dependently wealthy; the money went away about the same way that it came into my life, through no fault/credit of my own. (It took hard work and stupidity for my parents to undo in two years what my parents had done in 8 with an inheritance, building it up to something that might have been $20 million, down to $0. And how do you lose money on a TV station, anyway?! (One of their clever investments.))
But that household average of yours
is wealthy! Sure, it is a combination of consistent work and good luck, but the result is still wealth. You're in the
top quintile for your age, not the middle three! How is that not wealthy?!
I hope that there is an afterlife or reincarnation or something so that your goodness gets rewarded beyond this mortal sphere, though I will be
very pleasantly surprised to discover it! I appreciate what you do, in the here and now - and appreciating, too, that that is neither why you do it nor why you told me.